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THE GAINESVILLE NEW&, WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 5, 1905
INDUSTRIAL
“ I have used Ayer’s Hair Vigor
for a great many years, and al
though I am past eighty years of
age, yet I have not a gray hair in
my head.”
Geo. Yellott, Towson,. Md.
gia Commissioner
Agriculture's Hints.
CHESTNUT MOUNTAIN,
THE SCIENTIFIC FARMER,
We mean all that rich,
dark color your hair used
to have. If it's gray now,
no matter; for Ayer’s
Hair Vigor always re-
High—He Who Makes His Living
by Tilling the Soil Should Be no Ex
ception to This Rule.
Talk of the Commissioner.
I have written many letters urging
the farmers of Georgia to take the one
step that will make our great State
absolutely self-supporting, and some
times I have feared that my persis
tence would weary them. But when
one kno ws that he is right, he must
persevere.
In recent talks from this department
it has been shown that Georgia is not
yet the self-supporting State that she
was previous to the civil war. Though
there is in this respect great improve
ment, much yet remains to be done.
Until every needed step has been tak
en, it behooves the Georgia Depart
ment of Agriculture to give line upon
line and precept upon precept.
In many sections of our State there
is still time for the sowing of wheat,
rye and barley. By as much as w?
have, through unfavorable seasons,
fallen short in our crops of cotton and
corn, by so much is the necessity up
on us to make up the deficiency in the
abundance of other crops. Unflagging
energy is the price or success, ana
this is as true of farming as of any
other business. It is the diligent man,
who shrinks not at any necessary toil,
who makes his mark upon his day
and generation.
One of the best signs of the times
is the restlessness of the people in
every industrial pursuit, the constant
striving after better things.
A scientific farmer is a learned man,
in that particular branch of education.
Time was When no man was called
educated who had not received a di
ploma from a college. Now the man
skilled in his proiession, whatever that
may be, is classed among the scientific.
It is the duty of every man to aim
high. He, who makes his living by
agriculture, should consider himself
under obligation to do his work in such
a way as will Lest, promote the pros
perity and happiness of his family.
Whether he believes- it or not, he has
no right to go on in the old slipshod
yay, making a bare living out of the
soil which holds within its bosom un
told wealth for him who seeks it in
the right way. He is unworthy the
name of farmer, who sits idly down,
whining about his bad luck, instead of
bestirring himself like a man to force
fortune’s smile.
Of course, it is hard to be disappoint
ed and to have one’s expectations cut
short by unfavorable seasons; but the
remedy is his going right at it again.
“What if- the say is overcast?
The dark appearance will not last;
Expect a better day!.” j
But, it is folly to expect anything
to turn up, unless you make it turn up.
The following suggestions from “The
Southern Planter,” a farm journal
published in Richmond, Va., are so
stores color to gray hair.
Sometimes it makes the
hair grow very heavy and
long; and it stops falling
of the hair, too.
$1.00 a bottle. All druggists.
If your druggist cannot supply yon,
send "us one dollar and we will express
you a bottle. Be sure and give the name
of your nearest express ofiice. Address,
J. C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass.
A toad under
a harrow
suffers no more than the faithful horse
thdt is tortured with Spavins, Swinney, Harness
Sores, Sprains, etc. Most horse owners know this
and apply the kind si sympathy that heals, known
far and. wide as
A PRAYER.
It is my joy in life to find
At every turning of the road
The strong arm of a comrade kind
To help me on with my load:
And since I have no gold to give,
And love alone must make
amends,
My only prayer is, while I live—
God make me worthy of my
friends.
—Frank Demyster Sherman, in
Leslie’s Monthly for November.
Maastainig’ -$?'■
Lie S mem t.-
Never fails—not even in the most aggravated cases.
Cures caked udder in cows quicker than any known
remedy. Hardly a disease peculiar to muscle, shin
or joints that cannot be cured by it.
A Neighbor of W. J. Bryan.
Iam glad of this opportunity to tes
tify to tne beneficial effects of Cheney’s
Expectorant. During the past winter
it did not fail once to cure my cold or
to give instant relief to coughing.
A. A. BRADBURY.
Lincoln, Neb.
A Thanksgiving Dinner-
. Heavy eating is usually the first cause
of indigestion. Repeated attacks in-
fiame the mucous membranes lining
the stomach, exposes the nerves of the
stomach, producing a swelling after
eating, heartburn, headache.
UuKcS WHciSE ALL LISE FAILS.
Best Conjrb Syrup. Tarfes tiuoL Use
in time 3ol<i by druggists-
Farmers the Capitalists.
Farmers, so far as actual wealth is
concerned, are the capitalists of the
United States, says Success. The cen
sus bureau report on the value of farm
ing property of the country estimates
that the 5,789,657 farms of the United
States are worth $16,674,690,247. Of
this amount, $8,560,198,191, or 21.4 per
cent., represents the value of buildings
and $13,114,492,056, or 87.6 per cent.,
the value of land and improvements.
Farm implements and machinery are
and live stock is
sour ris
ings and finally catarrh of the stomach.
Kodol relieves the inflammation, pro
tects the nerves and cures catarrh.
Kodol cures indigestion, dyspepsia, all
stomach troubles by cleansing and swee
tening the glands of the stomach. Rob
ertson & Law.
The tram robbers will bood dis
pute Morgan’s right tp being the
most successful business man in
America, if he doesn’t look to his
laurel b.
John W. Gates lost fit tv
pounds in Europe; but every hotel
waiter in England will vouch for
its not being “pounds sterling.”—
Mason News.
worth $761,261,550,
worth $8,078,050,041, making the total
farming wealth over $20,514,000.
Trains from Washington, Cte'B
lotte, etc. for Atlanta, etc.,
Gainesville: No. 35, Fast Jit
(daily) 4:2S a. m; No. 17, Bella
(except Sunday) 7:20 a. nr. &
39, Express (daily) 2:45 p.
No. 37, Limited, (daily) S:S0p.
m; (daily) 8:28 p.m.
Through trains for Washing^
New York, etc. Connections i
Lula ,for Athens, at Toccoa ft
Agricultural
College
ajfe MA3*Bu1L0!NG-
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local application as they cannot
reacu the aisea&ed portion of the ear.
There is only one way to cure deafness,
and that is by constitutional remedies.
Deafness is caused by an inflamed con
dition of the ihucous lining of the
Eustachian lube. When this tube is
inflamed you bave a rumbling sound or
imperfect hearing, and when it is en
tirely closed, Deafness is the result,
and unless the inflammation can be
taken out and this tube restored to its
normal condition, hearing will be de
stroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten
are caused by Catarrh, which is noth
ing but an inflamed condition of the
mucous services.
Vve will give One .Hundred Dollars
for any case of deafness (caused by
catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall’s
Catarrh Cure. Sena lor circulars, free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Hall’s Family FiLis are the best.
London, Oct. 30—It was of
ficially announced today that the
purchase price of the White Star
Line (on joining the International
Mercantile Marine Company) is
$53,287,180.
DAKLONEGA, GA.
A college education in the reach cf all. A.B..
B.S., Normal and Business Man’s courses.
Good laboratories; healthful, invig-cratic.f cli
mate; military discipline; good moral and
religions ‘ influences. Cheapest board in the
State; abundance of country produce; expenses
from $75 to $150 a year; board in dormitories
or private families. Special license course lor
teachers; full faculty of nine; all under the
control of the University. A college prepar
atory class. Co-ed.tcation of sexes. The insti
tution founded specially for students of limited
means. Send f ~>r catalogue to the President.
< *os. S. Stbwaxt. A.M.
] Treating Roads With Oil.
The experiment of treating roads
with oil instead of water as a means of
preventing the clouds of dust raised by
motor cars and other vehicles, was
carried out recently on a mile of the
London and Southampton, road be
tween Farmborough and Aldershot.
Crude petroleum was laid by a staff of
men with watering cans. The road ab
sorbed it quickly, leaving the surface
like wet sand, which, as the traffic
passed over it, became hard and well
knit. The amount of oil used was about
1,000 gallons to a quarter of a mile
The Prince of Batten berg and other
distinguished visitors to the Empress
Eugenie at Farmborough, were.among
travelers in motor cars who passed
over the road during the day and who
noted the agreeable absence of dust,
due to the application of the oil.
Kind o’ Mixed Up.
A New York man is being sued by
one of a divorced couple for the aliena
tion of the wife’s affections and by the
other for breach of promise for mar
riage, says an exchange. The former
husband and the former wife want
$100,000 apiece. The unfortunate now
withstanaing this double fire would
seem certainly to have realized the
pathos of that position described as be
ing between the devil and the deep
blue sea.
PURE
OLD
LINCOLN COUNTY
Mr. Bentley Gaston of Atlanta
visited his father, Judge J. B.
Gaston, Saturday and Sunday.
We- the Distillers, guarantee these goods to be pure and 7 J e&r s
old. None better at any price. We will ship in plain boxes to any adores-
EXPRESS PREPAID, at the following distiller’s prices:
5 Full Bottles, $3.45. 16 Full Bottles $8.55. 12 Full Bottles $7.30
15 Full Bottles $9.70. 25 Full Bottles $15.90. ,
;lass and corkscrew in every box. Your money back if not as represented-
AMERICAN SUPPLY CO., 662 Main St., Memphis, Term.
O A positive specific for bilious fever,
malaria, chilis and fever, malarial
lid poisoning,malarial debility, malarial
~ “* greisfefiS J31 Pruggitta.
!, Price, 60 eta.
Ague Cure dyspepsia, dumb ague
.